Caryophyllales, pink or carnation order of dicotyledonous flowering plants. The order includes 33 families, which contain more than 11,000 species in 692 genera. Nearly half of the families are very small, with less than a dozen species each.

Distribution and abundance

The most striking ecological feature of Caryophyllales is its dominance in alkaline and arid regions of the world. Although its large families are distributed worldwide in a variety of habitats, ones such as Caryophyllaceae (pink or carnation family), Amaranthaceae (amaranth family), and Polygonaceae (smartweed family) have many members that are especially adapted to deserts or are halophytic (salt-loving). For example, Aizoaceae (fig-marigold or ice plant family) occurs over most of the Earth, but its chief centre of distribution is in desert and temperate latitudes of southern Africa and Australia. Likewise, Portulacaceae (purslane family) is worldwide but with a strong occurrence in arid regions of western North America. Plumbaginaceae (leadwort family) is common throughout the world, but most members thrive along seashores and in other saline environments. Frankeniaceae (alkali-heath family) is worldwide but scattered in distribution. Other families are more restrictive in their geographical distributions.

Cactaceae (cactus family) is native through most of the length of North and South America, from British Columbia and Alberta southward. The northernmost limit is along the Peace River in Canada, and the southernmost limit extends far into southern Chile and Argentina. The only representatives of the family possibly native to the Old World are members of the genus Rhipsalis, with species in East Africa, Madagascar, and Sri Lanka. Whether these plants are actually native to the Old World or introduced in historic times is unknown. For example, various species of Opuntia (prickly pear cactus) and some other genera were introduced from the New World into the Mediterranean region, and some have grown wild there since shortly after the discovery of America. In fact, species of Opuntia have become widely naturalized in India, the Malayan region, Hawaii, and Australia. In Australia and southeastern South Africa, they have become pests and are controlled largely by larvae of moth species from Opuntia’s original native habitat.

Engelmann prickly pear (Opuntia engelmannii)

Grant Heilman Photography

Phytolaccaceae (poke family) and Basellaceae (Madeira-vine family) include plants primarily found in the Neotropics. Nyctaginaceae (four-o’clock family) is common throughout the tropics but occurs also in the warmer temperate regions. Molluginaceae (carpetweed family) is found in tropical and temperate areas, especially in southern Africa. Tamaricaceae (tamarisk family) is widespread in Eurasia and Africa, especially the Mediterranean and Central Asia.

Several families, most of them small in size, are endemic to restricted areas. Asteropeiaceae (eight species), Physenaceae (two species), and Barbeuiaceae (one species) are endemic to Madagascar. Rhabdodendraceae (three species) and Stegnospermataceae (three species) are restricted to the Neotropics. Two families, Sarcobataceae (two species) and Simmondsiaceae (one species), are found exclusively in southwestern North America.

Three insectivorous families are restricted to the Old World: Dioncophyllaceae (three species in tropical Africa), Drosophyllaceae (one species on the Iberian Peninsula), and Nepenthaceae (pitcher plant family, found from Madagascar to New Caledonia). Another carnivorous plant family, Droseraceae (sundew or Venus’s-flytrap family), is worldwide in distribution.

Economic importance

Caryophyllales includes plants ranging from garden subjects and vegetables to bizarre succulent plants that resemble stones. The garden plants include carnations, pinks, four-o’clocks, amaranths, portulacas, and Madeira vines. Vegetables in the order include beets, spinach, and Swiss chard. Aizoaceae includes ice plants, sea figs (also called beach apples), and living stones (lithops). Stem or leaf succulents in Cactaceae and Aizoaceae are commonly collected and used in rock gardens.

Lithops

A to Z Botanical Collection/EB Inc.

Caryophyllaceae

Caryophyllaceae (pink or carnation family) includes a number of important plants known for their unusual beauty, nutritional value, or peculiar adaptations to difficult habitats. Many members are used to produce medicines, while others cause disease or even death. Perhaps the best-known ornamental of the family is Dianthus (the pinks), a strongly scented group of plants when found in nature. Native to Europe and Asia, D. chinensis (Chinese pink), D. plumarius (clove pink), D. deltoides (maiden pink), and D. barbatus (sweet William) all develop in clumpy growths with numerous colourful flowers. Although perhaps less fragrant than the wild pinks, D. caryophyllus (carnation) is commercially grown in large numbers and is a popular cut flower. Another important cut flower in the family is Gypsophila paniculata (baby’s breath), which is native to Europe, Asia, Australia, and New Zealand.

Carnation (Dianthus caryophyllus).

Zeynel Cebeci

Minuartia and Stellaria (both known as chickweed) and Sagina (pearlwort) are herbaceous plants in this family and are well adapted to rock gardens, although some species can be weedy. Gypsophila rokejeka, in combination with sesame seeds and honey, is used in making the confection halvah; G. struthium is found in Europe and the United States and may have some curative effects on certain skin diseases. Arenaria rubra (sandwort) is commonly found in sandy heaths near the sea in Europe, Asia, North America, and Australia and has been used as a folk medicine to cure acute and chronic cystitis. Saponaria officinalis (soapwort) is common in central and southern Europe, and its dried roots and flowers are purported to cure skin problems.

Amaranthaceae

Amaranthaceae (amaranth family) contains a number of important plants. Species of Atriplex (saltbush) are extremely tolerant of environments with a high salt concentration and do exceedingly well near coastal areas. A. halimus (sea orach) is cultivated for its beautiful foliage and silvery-gray stems; its flowers are green and rather inconspicuous. A. hortensis (garden orach) was at one time used as a cure for gout. Another interesting ornamental genus is Kochia, which includes K. scoparia (summer cypress) and K. scoparia trichophylla (burning bush); the leaves of the latter turn a beautiful red in autumn.

Beta contains two important vegetable crops. B. vulgaris var. vulgaris is the sugar beet; it and the garden beet, or beetroot, were derived from B. vulgaris var. maritima (wild sea beet). The beet leaves are similar in taste to spinach. The root may be dark purplish red, yellow, white, or striped. The beet can be boiled or baked and is often pickled; in eastern Europe, it is used in a soup called borsch. Cultivars of the beet include Forono, Cylindra, Boltardy, Detroit Dark Red, and Chioggia (a striped beet). Beta vulgaris cicla (Swiss chard) is grown only for its leaves; cultivars include Bright Lights and Ruby Chard. Spinacia oleracea (spinach) is a cultivated leafy vegetable with a high content of iron.

Chenopodium (goosefoot) includes succulent herbs that commonly develop as weeds along seacoasts and salt marshes. C. quinoa is a native of the Andes in South America and is cultivated as an important nutritious grain crop by people in that region. The American Indians used the whole herb of the goosefoot in a decoction for painful menstruation; the essential oil was once used for its anthelmintic properties (expulsion of parasitic intestinal worms), but it has been replaced by synthetic medicines.

The leaves of Amaranthus hybridus (smooth pigweed) are used as a leafy vegetable similar to spinach and can be made into a tea that is purported to have astringent properties and to cure dysentery, diarrhea, and ulcers. The word amaranthus is from the Greek for “unwithering,” and the plant was used as a symbol of immortality. The ancient Greeks held A. hypochondriacus (prince’s feather) as sacred for its healing properties and used it to decorate tombs and images of gods. A. caudatus (love-lies-bleeding) is a Neotropical species that is often grown for its edible leaves and seeds as well as for its long, pendant ropes of flowers.

Love-lies-bleeding (Amaranthus caudatus)

A.J. Huxley/EB Inc.

Alternanthera philoxeroides (alligator weed) was introduced into North America as a cultivated ornamental, but its rapid growth habit in watery environments has often caused it to be considered a weed. Gomphrena globosa (globe amaranth) is from tropical Asia, Australia, and America. It is unusual in that the flower heads of tiny pink, white, or purple flowers are subtended by two coloured leafy bracts. Celosia cristata (cockscomb), sometimes also treated under C. argentea, is a cultivated species with two main variants, the Plumosa (plumed) group and the Cristata (cockscomb) group.

Cockscomb (Celosia argentea)

Grant Heilman/EB Inc.

Cactaceae

The cacti are curious, often thorny (spiny), succulent-stemmed plants constituting the family Cactaceae, characteristic of and well adapted to dry regions of the Western Hemisphere. Although all cacti are native to the Americas, except for a few species of Rhipsalis, they are cultivated widely throughout the world for their bizarre forms and often striking blossoms. Cacti are easily grown from cuttings or from seeds. They are well adapted to warm, arid indoor conditions and require little care once established. Cacti are cultivated chiefly for their ornamental features and general hardiness. They can be grafted easily, and many rare species are propagated by grafting upon more vigorous stocks. Many small cacti are suitable for home cultivation. Without water, most cacti persist but do not grow. Some species, however, require periodic drought. Many species grow well in warm weather in full sun, provided there is adequate soil moisture, but others require some shade.

Cacti are economically important plants in Mexico, parts of Central and South America, and the Caribbean region. Various species are cultivated for food, including complexes of prickly pears, especially of Opuntia ficus-indica (Indian fig), and Cereus (torch cactus). The edible parts of the plant are either the fruits or the prickly pear “pads” (nopales), which are technically flattened, succulent stems. Drinks prepared from some cactus fruits have been a popular native medicine for fevers. In Mexico, leaves of chollas, resembling string beans, are eaten. In Latin America, species of Opuntia, Cereus, and other genera are planted around houses, often forming a “living fence.” Echinocactus and Ferocactus (both known as barrel cacti) are a source of water in emergencies.

Barrel cactus (Echinocactus grusonii)

Carlo Bevilacqua—SCALA/Art Resource, New York

Polygonaceae

Polygonaceae (smartweed family) consists of popular vegetables and cultivated ornamentals. The most notable cultivar is Fagopyrum esculentum (buckwheat); its edible seeds are used sometimes in flour, particularly for buckwheat pancakes, and portions of the plant are frequently included in animal feed. The leafstalks of Rheum rhaponticum (rhubarb) are edible, but the leaf blades are poisonous. Coccoloba uvifera (sea grape), growing on beaches, produces edible fruit used in making jellies. Ornamental plants include the sea grape; Polygonum sachalinense (scaline); P. aubertii (silver-lace vine, or Chinese fleeceflower); P. cuspidatum (Japanese knotweed), an aggressive ground cover; Homalocladium platycladum (ribbonbush or tapeform plant); and Antigonon leptopus (coral vine). Polygonum persicaria (redshank or willow weed) is a common weed in the United States, but it is grown as an ornamental in many parts of Europe. A number of common weeds and pasture plants belong to this family, such as Rumex acetosa (common sorrel) and R. acetosella (sheep’s sorrel).

Rhubarb (Rheum rhaponticum)

Derek Fell

Plumbaginaceae

Economically, Plumbaginaceae (leadwort family) is important mainly for its many garden ornamentals. Among these are a number of species of Armeria that go by the common name thrift, especially A. maritima, also called sea pink, a plant with small red flowers that is common on sea cliffs and in high mountains in western Europe.

Thrift (Armeria)

Kenneth W. Fink—Root Resources/EB Inc.

Limonium vulgare (sea lavender), with small flowers in dense spikes, grows in large tracts that sometimes turn acres of ground a lilac colour during the late summer blooming season. The flower spikes of L. vulgare and other Limonium species are often used in dried-flower arrangements for their lasting qualities and permanent colours. Prickly thrifts (species of Acantholimon, especially A. glumaceum) are favourite rock-garden plants.

The sap of Plumbago europeae (leadwort) is irritating and caustic, as are the juices of other Plumbago species, for example, P. indica (or P. rosea) and P. scandens, which are grown for their rose and white or blue flowers, respectively. The leaves and roots of P. zeylanica have been used as a remedy for skin disease, especially in the tropical Far East. The active principle extracted from Plumbago roots, used in several medicinal drugs, is a yellow pigment called plumbagin.

Plumbago capensis

L.J. Uttal

Portulacaceae

In Portulacaceae (purslane family), Lewisia rediviva (bitterroot) is a native of North America; it develops a thick, starchy edible root and is often grown as an ornamental in rock gardens. The genus was named in honour of Capt. Meriwether Lewis, a leader of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804–06) that explored the Missouri River and portions of northwestern North America. The root is highly nutritious and was eaten by the American Indians. Claytonia lanceolata (western, or lanceleaf, spring beauty) develops corms that were once eaten by North American Indians, and C. virginica (spring beauty) is a cultivated ornamental.

Bitterroot (Lewisia rediviva)

C.C. Wendle—Tom Stack and Associates

Nyctaginaceae

In Nyctaginaceae (four- o’clock family), Bougainvillea is a genus of climbing plants found in the Neotropics which is unusual in that its inconspicuous flowers arise from brightly coloured, long-lasting bracts (specialized leaves subtending flowers) arranged in groups of three to resemble a flower. The leaves of Neea theifera are used as a tea in Brazil. Mirabilis jalapa (four-o’clock) is a night-flowering herbaceous perennial. The white, pink, red, or yellow funnel-shaped flowers of the four-o’clock flower open late in the afternoon and close the following morning. The plant develops tuberous roots from which it can be propagated. The root tea of M. nyctaginea (wild four-o’clock) was used by the American Indians to treat burns and fever and as an anthelmintic, but the species is considered to be very poisonous.

Bougainvillea glabra

F.K. Anderson/EB Inc.

Other families

In Phytolaccaceae (poke family), Phytolacca americana is a hardy perennial native to the United States. It is a poisonous, invasive plant with an unpleasant smell, although its oval, green, red-tinged leaves and erect red stems with spikes of white flowers are very attractive. The American Indians brewed its berries into a tea that was used to treat rheumatism, arthritis, and dysentery. All parts of the plant, however, are considered to be extremely poisonous if not prepared carefully. Like P. americana, the young leaves and stems of the European P. acinosa are eaten as a vegetable.

Poke (Phytolacca americana)

Grant Heilman/EB Inc.

In Basellaceae, Anredera cordifolia (Madeira vine) is a native of South America and is cultivated for its beautiful viny habit. Basella alba is called nightshade (a common name also given to members of the genus Solanum of the order Solanales).

The Old World family Ancistrocladaceae has become important as a source for Michellamine B, which shows significant in vitro activity against HIV-1 and HIV-2 (AIDS viruses).

Characteristic morphological features

Caryophyllales is a diverse order in habit, leaf arrangement, floral features, and fruits. Many of its tropical families are evergreen trees or shrubs and occasionally lianas (e.g., Ancistrocladaceae, Barbeuiaceae, Cactaceae, Nepenthaceae). Prostrate or erect plants with succulent stems or leaves characterize a number of the families from warm temperate regions. Succulence, sometimes with the CAM type of photosynthesis, is seen most commonly in Aizoaceae (fig-marigold or ice plant family), Amaranthaceae (amaranth), Cactaceae (cactus), and Stegnospermataceae families. Shrubby plants with salt-excreting glands are best developed in the closely related Tamaricaceae (tamarisk) and Frankeniaceae. Various insectivorous modifications in leaves, such as sticky flypaper leaves, pitchers, or snap devices, are evident in the carnivorous plant families. Flowers range from bisexual to unisexual and from large and showy to small and reduced. Fruits can be follicles, capsules, or fleshy.

Droseraceae

Droseraceae (sundew or Venus’s-flytrap family) contains species with leaves modified as real traps—i.e., active mechanisms that clamp shut or coil about victims lured by nectar secretions and delicate odours. The family’s members are mainly herbs found in bogs, damp heaths, and wet savannas. Droseraceae are characterized by the presence of petals, separate stamens, bisexual flowers (stamens and pistil in the same flower), and a one-chambered ovary.

Dionaea muscipula (Venus’s-flytrap), for example, is restricted to the coastal plain of the two Carolinas in the United States, where it grows along edges of ponds and wet depressions. Its leaves radiate at ground level from a short stem. The blade of each leaf consists of two lobes hinged to each other like the jaws of a steel trap and provided with spinelike teeth along the margins. Many nectar glands and bright-red digestive glands cover the lobes’ surface. Three pressure-sensitive hairs arise from the middle of each lobe. When touched two or more times in quick succession, these hairs transmit a chemical message that causes the two lobes to close together, trapping the insect. When stimulated, the trap springs shut with amazing speed, usually within half a second or less. The leaf’s two lobes close tighter as the prey struggles; digestive glands exude enzymes that digest the insect’s softer parts within about a week. A leaf dies after three or four trappings.

Active traps of the Venus’s-flytrap (Dionaea muscipula), a carnivorous plant. If depressed …

Drosera species vary from several centimetres to a metre or more in height. The smallest species often are hidden among the mosses in a sphagnum bog. The sundews of the Northern Hemisphere usually produce 1 to 20 erect flowers on a single flower stalk that rises from a rosette of basal leaves to a typical height of 15–20 cm (6–8 inches). Each slender leaf is covered with several hundred tiny, bristlelike tentacles, each of which is topped with a reddish knob (in reality a gland) that exudes a clear, sticky, mucilaginous liquid. This sea of glistening, honey-fragrant drops lures midges, gnats, mosquitoes, and other tiny insects, who alight on the leaves. The mucilage on the tentacles smears and smothers the insect, whose struggles stimulate further secretions of the sticky liquid. Within some minutes, adjacent tentacles bend slowly over onto the insect, which becomes hopelessly engulfed by a web of sticky stalks. After a few days to a week, digestion is completed and the leaf straightens out, resetting the trap, and the remains of the previous victim fall off or are washed or blown away.

Nepenthaceae

Nepenthaceae (pitcher plant family) is characterized by a relatively limited geographic range (Madagascar, Southeast Asia, Australia), shrubby to woody climbers, absence of petals, unisexual flowers and plants, stamens united into a column, flower clusters capable of growing terminally, a four-chambered ovary, and the formation of unique pitchers. All of the species capture insects by means of pitcher-shaped leaves that function as pitfalls. The prey is attracted to the large showy leaves by nectar, and it slips from a treacherous lip into the pitcherlike hollow leaf, which in reality is a cistern of digestive liquid from which there is no escape. The leaves possess a broadened linear base that elongates into a strong, slender tendril. This twining tendril becomes transformed at its tip into a pitcher that is held upright. The pitcher consists of a bulging tube with a slippery rim surrounding the top opening. An unhinged lid arches over the orifice. The underside of the lid and the rim of the pitcher are beset with nectar glands, and red markings on the outside of the pitcher are additionally attractive to potential prey. Insects that successfully negotiate the corrugated lip of the pitcher lose their footing on the crumbly, waxy surface lining the upper half of the pitcher’s interior. They drop into the lower part of the pitcher, which is crowded with more than 6,000 digestive glands per square centimetre.

Cactaceae

Cactaceae (cactus family) varies greatly in size and general appearance. Opuntia (prickly pear) and other genera are jointed with short stem segments or pads that break apart easily. The creeping cacti spread quickly above ground; where they contact the ground they send out new roots. Epiphyte cacti grow on other plants or on hard substrates such as rocks. They generally have thin, flat stems for easy absorption of water, and the protective spines prevalent among ground cacti are replaced by hairs or bristles. Climbing cacti, such as some Epiphyllum (e.g., leaf cactus) and some Rhipsalis species are found in forests and develop few internal structural supports but support themselves with spines and aerial roots. In addition, cacti show an overall gradient in design from flattened, nonbranching discs to globes through various degrees of columnar forms, including branching at or below ground level in the more elongate forms, to bushy and arborescent forms. Examples include species of Lophophora (peyote, or mescal-button) and low clumps of prickly pear cactus to upright columns of barrel cacti (Ferocactus and Echinocactus) and the imposing saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea, also known as Cereus giganteus).

A cladode of the orchid, or leaf, cactus (Epiphyllum). The stem does not bear leaves but …

Except for the more primitive genera, few of the cacti have functional leaves, the photosynthetic functions of the plant having been taken over by the stem. The leaves, if discernible, are reduced in size (except in Pereskia). In Opuntia they appear only on young joints of the stem and fall off after a month or more of growth. They are relatively small and succulent and range from conical to elongated and cylindrical. In most genera the leaves are not visible to the unaided eye but are represented by a hump of tissue just below a spine-bearing areole—i.e, small cushions that develop from an axillary bud of the stem.

Many other plants, succulent and essentially leafless, are often confused with cacti. A large group of Euphorbia (spurges) occurring in Africa includes many plants with long cylindrical stems similar in appearance to cacti. These plants, common in cultivation, are distinguished readily by their milky juice, a feature rare in cacti and supposedly absent in cacti with elongated stems. Yucca and Agave species, from the order Liliales, often are confused with cacti, but they are distinguished readily by succulence of the leaves rather than the stem. Cacti can be distinguished from all other succulent plants by the presence of spines in areoles. Areoles are universal in the cactus family (at least in the juvenile phase) and have not so far been found in any other plant family. Almost all species of cactus have tufts of spines that develop from the areoles. These spines are of two basic types, stiff central spines located in the middle of the areole or radial spines that grow out laterally from the edges of the areole; the former are probably protective or when brightly coloured attract pollinators, while the latter are often white and reflect sunlight, providing shade and protecting the plant body from solar radiation. In addition, these spines may be variously modified, depending on the species; for example, they may be curved, hooked, feathery, bristly, flattened, sheathed, or needlelike. The only generally spineless cacti are the epiphytes, in which the protection afforded by the spines is not required in the relatively protected environment of the host plant, and various cacti that have developed aggressive chemical defenses.

Frequently the flowers of Cactaceae are large, attractive, and white or brightly coloured. Except in the most primitive genera, the flowers grow directly on the stem at the areoles. All the genera have a floral (perianth) tube that invests the ovary, and, except in Pereskia, adheres to its surface (the ovary is inferior, and the flower is said to be epigynous). The portion of the tube covering the ovary usually develops small, inconspicuous scales, which increase gradually in size upward on the free portion of the floral tube above the ovary. They grade into flower parts that resemble sepals and, farther up, into parts that resemble petals. There are many conspicuous stamens and 3 to 20 or more stigmas. In some groups, especially Opuntia, there is only a short floral tube above the ovary, but in others, as with some species of torch cactus, the tube may be very long.

Barrel cactus (Sclerocactus parviflorus)

Dorothea W. Woodruff/EB Inc.

Pollination of Cactaceae is mostly by insects or birds, though sometimes by other animals such as bats. Because there is no precise mechanism governing the pathway of pollinators, the process of pollination tends to be haphazard, at least in most of the larger flowers of the open (as opposed to the tubular) types. Most flowers open in the daytime and are visited by day-flying insects or birds, but many, especially such species as the saguaro and the various species of Cereus, open at night. As with other night-pollinated plants, the night-blooming cacti tend to be white-flowered.

Other families

Plumbaginaceae (leadwort family) consists of perennial herbs and shrubs. The plants are characterized by alternating, simple leaves that often bear glands on the surface and by radially symmetric, bisexual flowers, the petals of which are fused into a tube and the sepals of which remain attached to the fruit until maturity. The male flower parts (stamens) number five and arise from the inner surface of the corolla (fused petal tube) opposite the petal lobes. The female structure (pistil) is superior (positioned above the other flower parts) and composed of five carpels (structural segments), which enclose one chamber containing a single ovule. The upper part of the pistil consists of five more or less united styles topped by their stigmas, the pollen-receptive surfaces.

Every flower part serves some purpose in the making of seeds. The colorful, fragrant petals attract …

Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Polygonaceae (smartweed family) consists mostly of herbs and some trees, shrubs, and vines. The leaves of this family alternate along the stem, and the stipules are usually united into a sheath that surrounds the stem at the base of the leaf petiole. The inflorescences are generally cymes or racemes, and the individual flowers are bisexual with a superior ovary consisting of three united carpels at the base of which is a single ovule.

Caryophyllaceae (pink or carnation family) can be recognized by its herbaceous habit and the opposite leaves that are joined by a line at the base. The inflorescence is cymose (determinate) and the flowers have both a calyx and corolla, with 5 or 10 stamens. The individual petals are bilobed and/or clawed. Most members of the family produce capsular fruits.

Amaranthaceae (amaranth family) includes the former spinach family Chenopodiaceae. Members of Amaranthaceae are more or less succulent herbs, often with swollen nodes. The small flowers often have 1–3 carpels and one or two basal ovules. The fruits either have a circumscissile capsule or fail to open and are surrounded by the more or less fleshy perianth and bracts. There are several types of C4 photosynthesis in the family, and many species are halophytes (adapted to areas with high salt content).

Love-lies-bleeding (Amaranthus caudatus)

A.J. Huxley/EB Inc.

Aizoaceae (fig-marigold or ice plant family) are leaf succulents with C4 and CAM photosynthesis. The flowers are typically in a cymose inflorescence, with the perianth of the flowers united with the stamens to form a tube. A well-developed nectary at the base of the tube encourages animal pollination.

French marigold (Tagetes patula).

Robert Bornemann/Photo Researchers

Phytolaccaceae (poke family) consists of trees, shrubs, woody climbers, and herbs. The flowers are small and in racemose inflorescences. The flowers lack petals and possess many fused carpels (or a single carpel), each with a single basal ovule. The fruit is often a berry.

Poke (Phytolacca americana)

Grant Heilman/EB Inc.

Nyctaginaceae (four-o’clock family) includes herbs with swollen nodes, as well as lianas and trees. The flowers are tubular with a petaloid perianth that is contorted and twisted when developing. The fruit is a one-seeded fleshy drupe or dry achene.

Four-o’clock (Mirabilis jalapa)

A to Z Botanical Collection/EB Inc.

Portulacaceae (purslane family) is mainly composed of annual or perennial succulents. Flowers are typically small, except in the cultivated species such as Portulaca grandiflora, and possess two sepals and typically five petals. The fruit is a capsule that splits either vertically or horizontally.